Soapberry Family (Sapindaceae)
Acer macrophyllum |
Acer negundo |
Aesculus californica |
Acer cappadocicum |
Acer japonicum 'Aconitifolium' |
Acer saccharinum 'Wieri' |
Acer japonicum |
Acer campestre |
Acer carpinifolium |
Aesculus hippocastanum |
Acer opalus |
Acer palmatum 'Ozakazuki' |
Acer monspessulanum |
Acer spicatum |
Acer platanoides |
Aesculus glabra |
Acer griseum |
Acer rubrum |
Acer platanoides 'Faassen´s Black' |
Acer rufinerve |
Aesculus carnea |
Acer saccharinum |
Acer pectinatum subsp. laxiflorum |
Acer pensylvanicum |
Acer saccharum |
Aesculus x neglecta 'Erythroblastos' |
Acer pseudoplatanus |
Acer circinatum |
Acer cissifolium |
Aesculus flava |
Aesculus x neglecta 'Erythroblastos' |
Acer opalus The italian maple is native to southeastern Europe to the south-western Germany. |
Acer palmatum 'Ozakazuki' The genus of the Palmatum maples includes some undergrow trees, which always have a palmate leaf. Depending on the variety, the leaf is lobed to strong slotted. The subjects maples come from Asia (China, Japan). |
Acer monspessulanum The montpellier maple is widespread. It is found in western Asia, north-western Africa, southeastern France and the Mediterranean, but also in the warm Rhine-Main area. |
Acer spicatum The Vermont Maple occurs naturally in the northeastern United States and southeastern Canada to approximately half inland. The maple is an important protagonist in the Indian summer. From the sap of the tree can be produced maple syrup. |
Acer platanoides The Norway maple is native in Central and Eastern Europe as well as in southern Asia. The maple grows relatively quickly and is very large. |
Acer griseum The paperbark maple comes from China. The growth habit is often multi-stemmed. Noticeable is that the detaching cinnamon-brown bark. The tree is available in some nurseries. |